A federal appeals court on Friday upheld its previous order temporarily blocking President Joe Biden’s vaccine and testing mandate for large companies, rejecting a Justice Department request to lift the freeze.
A three-judge panel for the Louisiana-based Fifth Circuit said in a 24-page ruling that the Biden administration’s order exposes companies to “severe financial risk if they refuse or fail to comply, and threatens to decimate their workforces.”
“On the dubious assumption that the mandate does pass constitutional muster, which we need not decide today, it is nonetheless fatally flawed on its own terms,” the court wrote, signaling the uphill legal battle facing the administration.
The judges said the court’s earlier stay was reaffirmed pending a full judicial review.
The vaccine rule was announced by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, earlier this month and scheduled to take effect Jan. 4. It requires businesses with 100 or more employees to ensure their workforces are fully vaccinated or require workers who aren’t vaccinated to wear masks and show negative Covid-19 test results at least once a week. Employers can face fines for not complying.
A group of companies and individuals, including churches, restaurants and grocers, filed the suit shortly the rule was announced, seeking a permanent injunction. They were joined by Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas and Utah. The groups argued that OSHA usurped its authority by issuing the sweeping mandate, and that Covid-19 is not a workplace hazard. In addition, they argued the rule will make it harder to maintain enough workers in a tight labor market.